Saturday, November 29, 2008

ISI chief not to visit India, FC approves decision

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan's Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani chaired a special cabinet meeting today. The meeting, held at the Prime Minister’s Secretariat, was called to discuss the situation prevailing due to the recent incidents of terrorism in Mumbai.

The federal cabinet approved the decision that the Director General of the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) will not visit India. Majority of federal ministers participated in the meeting; however, some ministers could not attend the meeting due to being abroad.

Foreign Minister Makhdoom Shah Mehmood Qureshi, who returned home from India, briefed the cabinet on his Indian visit.

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Live with Talat - 28 November 2008

Second Opinion - 28 November 2008

Kaltak - 28 November 2008

Hum Sab Umeed Say Hain - 28 November 2008

Five U.S. citizens killed in Mumbai attacks: State Dept

WASHINGTON: The State Department said on Friday that five US citizens had been killed in the attacks on Mumbai, India, and that more Americans remained missing.

"The Department is now able to confirm the deaths of five American citizens.

Consular staff have been in contact with all of the victims' families," Gordon Duguid, acting deputy spokesman, said in a statement.

"The Consulate in Mumbai will continue to work with the Indian Police until all missing American citizens have been accounted for," he added.

Taj Hotel secured as siege over

MUMBAI: Security forces freed the landmark Taj hotel here after an intense night-long firing amid a series of explosions, with three terrorists Smoke and flames billow out of the Taj Mahal hotel moments after the hotel was freed from terrorists.

Officials say the death toll in the terrorist attacks on Mumbai has risen to 195 as more bodies have been discovered after commandos ended the siege on a luxury hotel.

Shantaram Jadhav, an official at Mumbai's disaster control office, says 195 people have been killed and 295 wounded.

Jadhav says ``the death toll is likely to rise because there arestill bodies in our vans that are being brought into hospitals.''

The operation to flush out terrorists from Taj Hotel is over, signalling an end to the 62-hour siege by terrorists three of whom were killed this morning in an assault by the elite commandos of National Security Guards (NSG).

However, the NSG is still sanitising the hotel to check if any remaining terrorist or explosive is still in the 400-room hotel, NSG Director General J K Dutt told reporters.

An AK-47 rifle was also recovered from them. "There was lot of shooting. Grenades were lobbed and explosives were used by the terrorists," he said.

On whether all the terrorists have been killed and hotel is now free, he said that it could be ascertained after the combing operation is over.

During the night, terrorists holed out in the hotel engaged in a fierce gun battle with security forces as some places in the first and the ground floors of the 565-room building set afire by terrorists amid explosions in the over 100-year-old heritage complex in the Colaba area.

3 terrorists killed at Taj, operations officially on

NEW DELHI: The 59-hour siege of old Taj hotel ends with the NSG killing three terrorist who were holed up inside. NSG said they would not declare the operation over before sanitising each and every floor.

"Three terrorists have been killed but we are still continuing our operations," Director General of NSG, J K Dutt, told reporters outside the hotel.

On whether all the terrorists have been killed and hotel is now free, he said that it could be ascertained after the combing operation is over.

During the night, terrorists holed out in the hotel engaged in a fierce gun battle with security forces as some places in the first and the ground floors of the 565-room building set afire by terrorists amid explosions in the over 100-year-old heritage complex in the Colaba area.

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